THE LATEST ARTICLES
NEWSLETTERS
melissa joseph
Marion Maneker December 17, 2024
A conversation with Brooklyn Museum director Anne Pasternak and Uovo prize founder Steven Guttman about bestowing this year’s award on Melissa Joseph, the fast-rising textile designer and painter.
judy garland ruby slippers
Marion Maneker December 16, 2024
The market for pop-cultural artifacts has never been hotter. For some time, there’s been a growing fixation on sports memorabilia and rock god guitars, but the runaway sale of Judy Garland’s ruby slippers brought the point home: When it comes to memorabilia, we’re not in Kansas anymore.
Patrick Drahi
Marion Maneker December 10, 2024
Shortly after closing on a $1 billion financing, the 280-year-old auction house is drastically cutting back staff in offices around the world. With new real estate that emphasizes luxury retail and plans to exploit the power of its brand, what does the future look like for a leaner, meaner Sotheby’s?
art basel miami
Marion Maneker December 8, 2024
There isn’t one definitive Art Basel Miami Beach experience. Everybody rushes around chasing their own bliss. And while the parties and brand activations might have been toned down—sorry, no Rihanna this year—many attendees said the quality of the artwork on offer was better and the prices were more realistic.


Alex Gartenfeld
Marion Maneker December 3, 2024
Forget Basel. The real center of Miami’s overachieving art community may be the newish Institute of Contemporary Art and Alex Gartenfeld, its wunderkind director, who has transformed the scene in a mere decade.
Rene Magritte L'empire des lumières
Marion Maneker December 1, 2024
The behind-the-scenes story of how a small gouache work from the Belgian master leveraged timing, demand, and deal heat to draft off the Ertegun piece for a new record of its own.
René Magritte’s ‘L’empire des lumières’
Marion Maneker November 27, 2024
There were heroes amid the $1.3 billion in sales during last week’s New York auctions, and a couple humbling moments, too. But a closer inspection reveals something less flashy: steady, systematic gains for an art market that’s finally recovering from its post-pandemic malaise.
Ed Ruscha Standard Station, Ten-Cent Western Being Torn in Half
Marion Maneker November 24, 2024
Look past the crypto spectacle of Cattelan’s $6.2 million duct-taped fruit, and it’s clear that the premier auctions showed a steady appetite for the superstars’ stand-out works—Magritte, Ruscha, Prince—but a less reliable hunger for everything else. Of course, the houses are declaring victory.


Sydell Miller collection Picasso Matisse sotheby’s
Marion Maneker November 20, 2024
News and notes from the November sales romp: Buyers have cash and determination, but are still picky; Picasso had a rough night; and Matisse was mixed. But Kandinsky cleared $21 million and an unsigned Monet waterlilies sold for $65.5 million. (And yes, those Les Lalannes tables everyone is going wild for did just fine.)
Hans Neuendorf in 2001.
Marion Maneker November 17, 2024
A major Artnet shareholder is crying foul over the Neuendorf family’s abrupt cancellation of this week’s annual meeting, delaying an inevitable boardroom showdown.
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